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Splendora Agatha Cromwell (Halloweentown Series) Miss Lavinia Crotchet (The Worst Witch) Clarice Crow (The Worst Witch) Ursula Crowe (Wizards vs Aliens) Cas Crowfeather (Weirdsister College) D. Dahlia (The Originals) Tia Dalma (Pirates of the Caribbean (film series)) Darcy ; Dark Witch (Fantaghirò series) Misty Day (American Horror Story: Coven)
When they whittled it down to what was useful from the footage, it only ran 58 minutes. Now Roger had done a lot of sword-and-sorcery films, and so he told a couple of the editors to pull all they could from them and edit that footage in. So now the finished movie has a 15 or 20-minute prologue that has nothing to do with rest of the film! [3]
The Flying Sorceress: William Hanna, Joseph Barbera: 1956 [153] Four Rooms: Quentin Tarantino, Allison Anders, Alexandre Rockwell: 1995: Anthology film [154] Freeway II: Confessions of a Trickbaby: Matthew Bright: 1999 [155] Full Circle: Donna Read: 1993: Documentary [156]
María Antonia Socas Ortiz Lanús (August 12, 1959 – December 10, 2024) was an Argentine actress. [1]Although active in various media in her native country, particularly telenovelas and stage, [2] she was foremost known to international viewers for a number of mid-1980s sword and sorcery films produced by Roger Corman and Héctor Olivera, most notably as one of the title characters in John C ...
Deathstalker, also known as El cazador de la muerte, is a 1983 Argentine-American sword and sorcery film directed by James Sbardellati (credited as John Watson), and starring Rick Hill, Barbi Benton, Bernard Erhard and Lana Clarkson.
The Warrior and the Sorceress is a sword and sorcery version of the classic Kurosawa film Yojimbo. [5] The film became notorious due to María Socas spending much of the movie topless, along with several other actresses in bit roles displaying varying degrees of nudity. [citation needed] It is also considered by some to be a cult classic. [6]
The basic idea for the film was mostly Nicolas Cage's, who wanted to explore a mystic world and play a character with magical powers, and following a suggestion by his producer friend Todd Garner, decided to make a feature-length movie based upon the Fantasia segment of the same name. [8] [9] On February 12, 2007, this film was announced by ...
The series derived its name from the well-known song "We're Off to See the Wizard", featured in MGM's classic 1939 film The Wizard of Oz.Such was the popularity of the film among TV audiences by then that ABC decided to build an anthology series around it, a series which primarily showcased the first network telecasts of some of MGM's most popular recent live-action family films, much as Walt ...